Many modern challenges such as climate change and food security are difficult to address using classical computing. Quantum computers are expected to fare much better, because their fundamental computing unit, the quantum bit (qubit) can utilize quantum properties such as entanglement. These qubits are in practice realized on a specific hardware platform, but so far, no particular architecture has demonstrated superiority.
This project sought to demonstrate a fundamentally new type of platform to host such qubits. The qubit is realized with a carbon nanotube (CNT) whose mechanical vibrations are coupled to an embedded and trapped electron. The first objective was to demonstrate the interplay between the vibrations and the electron, whilst the second was to utilize this coupling for the formation of a qubit.
The image shows a scanning electron micrograph image of our platform. The carbon nanotube is indicated by the red arrows are grows from catalyst nanoparticles in the blue regions. The electron is confined along the suspended nanotube in the small region indicated by the dashed yellow rectangle by applying voltages to the electrodes highlighted in red.